Bucket List No. 14 - Hike - McGillivray Falls Trail
Why it is on my list:
This is a medium length trail that has a 4.6 km (2.7 miles) and a 2.8 km loop option that I found through the Province of Manitoba Website. I found this hilarious as AllTrails has the hike listed as taking 58 minutes while the information from the province says to allow 3 hours for the long loop and 2 hours for the short loop. The elevation gain was listed as moderate with only 193 ft of gain but a lot of the reviews said that the terrain can be challenging so I was intrigued but scared. Mostly it was on my bucket list as it would be my first solo hike in my renewed passion for hiking and even better it is an area that was known to have active bears (so active they had closed down some local waste collection sites), this was in the fall which is when bears can become more active preparing for winter. I thought I was fairly prepared for the hike but very nervous.
I did it!
On October 1, 2024 at McGillivary Falls Trail, Whiteshell Provincial Park, Manitoba - and it was a solo hike.
How I felt: absolutely amazing. I have let fear rule so many parts of my life and it almost prevented me
from accomplishing this hike. Being alone, doing a trail that had some climbs to it, in bear country - well I had family that thought I was slightly insane but I was prepare. Literally the only thing I didn't have was a bear bell for my backpack. I did end up buying one before hitting the trail and I was happy about that but mostly I actually just had my phone on the mount on my poles and listened to music (low volume) to make sure I didn't have any big surprises. There were so many points on the trail that I doubted my ability to do the hike, that I was certain I was going to have to be called to be rescued off the hike and I did it and I felt so amazing until I got to the last few meters of the hike and realized there was a massive steep climb down to my car. When I got to the bottom of that climb - let me tell you I sat and I cried. So many feelings and just so proud of myself.
Me at the end... yes you climb down that |
from accomplishing this hike. Being alone, doing a trail that had some climbs to it, in bear country - well I had family that thought I was slightly insane but I was prepare. Literally the only thing I didn't have was a bear bell for my backpack. I did end up buying one before hitting the trail and I was happy about that but mostly I actually just had my phone on the mount on my poles and listened to music (low volume) to make sure I didn't have any big surprises. There were so many points on the trail that I doubted my ability to do the hike, that I was certain I was going to have to be called to be rescued off the hike and I did it and I felt so amazing until I got to the last few meters of the hike and realized there was a massive steep climb down to my car. When I got to the bottom of that climb - let me tell you I sat and I cried. So many feelings and just so proud of myself.
General Hike information:
Getting to the Trail:
The trail is very easy to get to - there is a parking lot just on the west side of Highway 44 north of the Caddy Lake Campground. I will say this driving to the area from west the sign for the turn off for the falls is very easy to miss but if you make it to the caddy turn off which is just a few moments down the road you can easily turn around.Navigation on the trail:
Long Loop Sign |
Honestly the long loop was the best part of the trail for me - but I think that has less to do with the trail than what happened at the shelter. Once you come back you continue on the short loop back towards the car - you do not go back over the falls or the first part of the trail. However, this is where navigation can get a little tricky as the hiking trail does overlap with a biking trail. As long as you carefully look at the sign markings you will have no problem making it back to the parking lot. I did encounter a group that had an issue and ended up following the bike path instead and they ended back at the falls and had to walk back the first portion of the trail - maybe 50 meters.
Starting the trail:
First Section of trail |
to see the falls you are in luck. Just past the parking lot there is a little picnic area and then the bridge over the falls. The Falls.... were not falling when I was there in the fall, in fact there was very little water and I could walk on the falls but I hear they are amazing in the spring and look forward to seeing that. I will say this when I saw this section of the trail I thought I was in for a super easy hike and put my poles away on my bag and then quickly learned that if your there just to see the falls it is very easy but anything past that is more work.
Final thoughts:
Honestly for me there were so many things about this hike that made it a big moment for me. The first major category was going on a hike by myself. Forget the fact that I am a female for a moment, and that I am overweight - I was alone on a hike for the first time ever and I had a lot of fear of falling and something happening to me where I would get injured. Add to this the fact that I was hiking in bear country alone in a season where the bears have been very active and some of the local waste disposal sites were closed because of bear activity. I was scared - and a large part of this was not around the getting hurt and what I would do - but rather what would people think. I knew I was prepared for the hike: I had the following with me:
- small first aid kit for hiking issues like blisters (items I put into a large pill bottle);
- a large first aid kit for more pressing concerns like deep cuts, breaks, springs etc;
- extra tensor bandages;
- a water filtration straw (life straw);
- a small hunting knife;
- fire stick;
- Bear spray;
- Bear bell;
- whistle;
- emergency blanket;
- extra food and water;
- Apple watch with fall detection enabled;
- Apple phone with emergency satellite messages (even though I was in a good cell service area);
- Medications in case of anything (tummy, pain, allergy, etc).
One of the 'bad' signs |
- getting on the trail and finding myself in a situation I couldn't get out of because I physically couldn't because I wasn't strong enough;
- getting hurt on trail in a manner anyone could get hurt doing, just twisting and ankle or slipping.
Looking towards the lake |
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